Hell Is Other Robots

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Season 1 episode
Hell Is Other Robots
Hell is Other Robots.jpg
No.9
Production number1ACV09
Written byEric Kaplan
Directed byRich Moore
Title captionCondemned by the Space Pope
First aired18 May, 1999
Broadcast numberS01E09
Title referenceHell is other people from No Exit
Opening cartoon"Betty Boop and Grampy"
Special guest(s)Mike "Michael D" Diamond
Adam "King Ad-Rock" Horovitz
Dan Castellaneta
Additional
Commentary
(Transcript)
Transcript
Animatic
(Commentary)
Season 1
  1. Space Pilot 3000
  2. The Series Has Landed
  3. I, Roommate
  4. Love's Labours Lost in Space
  5. Fear of a Bot Planet
  6. A Fishful of Dollars
  7. My Three Suns
  8. A Big Piece of Garbage
  9. Hell Is Other Robots
  10. A Flight to Remember
  11. Mars University
  12. When Aliens Attack
  13. Fry and the Slurm Factory
Season 2 →
"9" redirects here, for the character, see Number 9 Man.

"Hell Is Other Robots" is the ninth episode of Futurama and of the first season and the last episode of the first broadcast season. It aired 18 May, 1999 on FOX. It guest stars Michael "Mike D" Diamond and Adam "King Ad-Rock" Horovitz from the Beastie Boys as themselves in jars, as well as Dan Castellaneta as the Robot Devil. Bender becomes obsessed with electricity, but after discontent from his friends, he joins Robotology, but his new extremes are also by far a discontent to his friends, who decides to make him sin, for which he ends up in Robot Hell and has to be rescued.

Contents

[edit] The Story

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[edit] Act I: I've been waiting a thousand years to see a Beastie Boys show!

Fry, Leela and Bender go to a Beastie Boys concert at Madison Cube Garden. Bender runs into Fender, an old friend who is now working for the band. After Fender gets Bender and company back-stage, he takes Bender to a party where robots are abusing electricity, or "jacking on." Bender quickly becomes addicted, and although his coworkers notice his strange behaviour, they can't identify the cause.

However, on a delivery, Bender begins to suffer withdrawal, and takes advantage of a nearby electrical storm in space to get a hit; as a result, the ship is destroyed, and his addiction is exposed. Confronted with the severity of his problem, Bender takes to wandering the streets, until he finds a Temple of Robotology that inspires him to give up his sinful ways.

Leela bashes the Robot Devil over the head

[edit] Act II: And as a further cost-cutting measure, I have eliminated the salt water cooler

Bender comes to work whistling a happy tune, and tells his friends about his new-found religion. Everyone is shocked and suspicious, but it quickly becomes apparent that Bender is being sincere. At first they support his decision, but his new personality soon becomes irritating: he drags them to his baptism, utters long-winded prayers over dinner, and let's his religion take over every aspect of his life.

In an attempt to return Bender to his old self, Fry and Leela take him to Atlantic City and tempt him with liquor, robbery, and cheap Hookerbots. His resistance to temptation quickly fails, and he abandons his religion for his former debauchery. But the same night, while he seduces a group of fembots in a Jacuzzi at the Trump Trapezoid Hotel, the Robot Devil arrives and takes him to Robot Hell.

[edit] Act III: What in Hell happened to Bender?

Fry and Leela find Bender missing, but luckily Nibbler finds and then follows his trail. It leads to an abandoned amusement park called Reckless Ted's Funland in New Jersey, where a fun house mirror is a doorway into an "actual, factual Robot Hell." Meanwhile, the Robot Devil explains to Bender that punishment for sin is something he accepted when he was baptized, and now he must face the consequences, which are all demonstrated for him in an elaborate musical tour of the different levels of hell. When Fry and Leela find them, they have one chance: the Fairness in Hell Act of 2275 states that they can reclaim Bender's soul if they best the Robot Devil in a fiddle contest. Leela volunteers for the contest, but having no musical ability to compete with the Robot Devil's incredible talent, she simply beats him with the golden fiddle. As the three of them escape, Bender steals a pair of wings and is shot with a golden halo, becoming an angel to save his friends' lives, and resolving from then on to always be himself.

[edit] Additional Info

Promo pic of this episode

[edit] Trivia

This episode is one of the few to feature its own name within itself.

[edit] Allusions

[edit] The Robot Hell Song

See List of song performances#Robot Hell

[edit] Quotes

[edit] Goofs

A three-eyed alien in the "Beastie Boys" audience has white eyes, which turn to black between shots.
For a brief second during the moshpit, the controls on Leela's wristpad disappear.

[edit] Characters

(In alphabetic order)

[edit] Episode Credits

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